From The News …

Time to clean up my long list of bookmarks again. Here are some interesting tidbits from the news that didn’t inspire full posts:

Statin Drugs Provide No Benefit: Study of 4 Million People

Well, I am shocked … turns out prescribing statins for everyone whose cholesterol isn’t sufficiently low (whatever the current definition of “sufficiently low” is) doesn’t appear to be doing any good, according to a recent study:

A population-based study in Sweden shows that the massive deployment of statins has provided no benefit. Three times as many statins were being taken by Swedish people in the year 2000 than in 1998. Yet, the numbers of people suffering or dying from heart attacks were unchanged by it.

The study covered nearly the entire Swedish population aged 40-79 for the years 1998-2000. They included the data from 289 municipalities, which included all areas of the country, urban, suburban, country, industrial, and everything in between. The total numbers were 1,926,113 men and 1,995,981 women—a total of 3,922,094 people.

Results from virtually the entire Swedish population demonstrated that the threefold increase in statins use provided no benefit.

I think I know where this is headed: soon we’ll be hearing about the Swedish Paradox. Statins really do prevent heart attacks, you see, unless … uh … unless you eat a lot of herring.

The FDA Gets A Clue About High-Dose Statins

It only took the FDA several years to pay attention to the warnings that statins can cause muscle damage, but they finally did.

The Food and Drug Administration is recommending that physicians restrict prescribing high-dose simvastatin (Zocor, Merck) to patients, given an increased risk of muscle damage. The new FDA drug safety communication, issued today, states that physicians should limit using the 80-mg dose unless the patient has already been taking the drug for 12 months and there is no evidence of myopathy.

The changes to the label are based on the Study of the Effectiveness of Additional Reductions in Cholesterol and Homocysteine (SEARCH), a study reported by heartwire. In that trial, 52 patients taking the 80-mg dose developed myopathy compared with one patient treated with the 20-mg dose. In addition, 22 patients treated with the high dose of simvastatin developed rhabdomyolysis compared with none treated with the 20-mg dose.

Rhabdomyolysis is medical-speak for “Holy @#$%! My muscles are breaking down and wasting away.”

Nothing like taking a drug that damages muscles to prevent heart disease. If memory serves, the heart is a muscle. I suspect that if high doses of statins can produce muscle damage extensive enough to be diagnosed, low doses may produce damage many patients don’t notice. And since the Swedish study shows that large-scale prescribing of statins hasn’t lowered rates of heart disease, here’s the logical conclusion: STOP TAKING THESE HORRIBLE DRUGS!

NASA Turns Animal Fat Into Jet Fuel

I guess if you’re not planning a mission to Mars, you have to find other ways to fill your day. So NASA scientists tested animal fat as jet fuel:

In March and April, researchers at NASA Dryden Flight Research Center in California test biofuel made of chicken and beef tallow (waste fat) in the engine of a DC-8 airplane.

To test the new animal-based biofuel, the researchers ran one engine burning Jet Propellant 8, or JP-8, fuel, which is very similar to the industry standard Jet-A fuel used in commercial aircraft. They ran a second engine on a 50-50 blend of JP-8 and Hydrotreated Renewable Jet Fuel, or HRJ — the animal-based biofuel. And a third engine ran on pure HRJ.

What they found was that the biofuel-powered engine produced much lower sulfate, organic aerosol, and hazardous emissions. It also produced 90 percent less black carbon emissions at idle and 60 percent less at a takeoff level of thrust.

I have mixed feelings about this one. I certainly don’t like seeing chicken and beef fat labeled as “waste fat.” They’re only wasted because we’re not smart enough to fry foods in them anymore.

On the other hand, I’d happily deal with the hassle of flying (naked x-ray included) if it meant I might someday find myself seated next to a vegan zealot when the pilot announced our flight was beef-powered.

“Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, ladies and gentlemen, if you look out the windows on your left, you’ll see we’re now passing over the Rocky Mountains. And by the way, this aircraft is using all-natural beef tallow as fuel.”

“Excuse me, flight attendant! Did he just say we’re flying on beef tallow?!”

“Yes, sir. You’ll be delighted to know we’re reducing our dependence on imported fossil fuels and emitting less pollution at the same time.”

“Well, I cannot be a party to animal slavery! I’m getting off this plane right now!”

“Sir, it’s not … sir, you need to keep your seat belt on. Sir, do not approach that door! Sir, DO NOT OPEN THAT DOOR! … Ladies and gentlemen, we have an opening in first class if anyone would like to upgrade.”

The son of Nicolas Cage was taken to the hospital following an altercation Tuesday afternoon at the Farmer’s Kitchen in Hollywood.

According to TMZ, 20-year-old Weston Cage was with his trainer when his trainer told him he couldn’t eat something on the menu. That’s when Weston started “freaking out” and allegedly started pushing his trainer in a violent way, refusing to calm down.

Police were called in to help and when they arrived, they told Weston they would use a taser if he did not cooperate. At that point, Weston complied. Authorities, however, were worried he was unstable, and paramedics were asked to strap him on a gurney before taking him to Cedars Sinai Medical Center to be evaluated.

Attacking a personal trainer?! You know, no matter what Fred Hahn told me I couldn’t eat, I’d never be stupid enough to start pushing him around. Of course, Fred would never forbid a client to eat anything. He’d just explain why it’s a bad idea: “Look, that dinner roll is going to jack up your blood sugar and give you a belly ache. Here, eat these five lobsters with butter instead.”

A $2 million project being unveiled in the lunchroom of a Texas primary school will use high-tech cameras to photograph what foods children pile onto their trays – and later capture what they don’t finish eating.

Digital imaging analysis of the snapshots will then calculate how many calories each student scarfed down. Local health officials said the program, funded by a US Department of Agriculture grant, is the first of its kind in a US school, and will be so precise that the technology can identify a half-eaten pear left on a lunch tray.

Researchers hope parents will change eating habits at home once they see what their kids are choosing in schools. The data also will be used to study what foods children are likely to choose and how much of if they’re eating.

Hmmm … we have reports that kids are tossing the tasteless low-fat foods the USDA requires schools to serve into the trash. What could possibly be the problem? Boy, that’s a tough one to figure out. Hey, maybe if we spy on them, we’ll come up with an answer!

Note to the USDA: kids are tossing the meals because the meals suck. You can send me a check for $200, and I’ll re-write that explanation in official-sounding government language for you.

From next year, GPs will receive a payment for every obese patient they advise to lose weight – on top of money for keeping lists of those who weigh too much. The plans form part of a desperate bid to tackle soaring rates of obesity in Britain, with two out of three adults now classed as overweight or obese.

Doctors will be instructed to be more pro-active in raising the topic of weight loss in their consultations, while new NHS guidance will say health workers and local authorities should do more to stop children and adults becoming overweight.

Brilliant! Governments spend money recommending diets that make people fatter, then pay doctors to tell people they’re fat, then spend more money to send fat people to counselors who tell them to eat the diet the government recommends.

Here’s the main effect this program will have on the health of our friends across the pond:

I’m sure MeMe Roth would approve of this method. Perhaps the British could do us a favor and invite her to spend a decade or so in England to oversee the shaming-fat-people program. Then she’d be less likely to pop on up my TV screen and make me lose my appetite.

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66 thoughts on “From The News …”

Having worked with said governmental agency as a client on a different project, I have no trouble believing those numbers. Or that they were patting themselves on the back for getting it done on the “cheap”.

Isabel wrote: “. . . but I won’t be quiet when my endocrinologist starts pushing me to see a bariatric surgeon.”

Bariatric surgery should be named for what it is, barbaric surgery. Right up there with statins — another huge money maker with huge damage potential. From what I’ve read, many people end up on low-carb for life anyway, though now it’s forced on them by the damage done by the surgery.

About a month ago, my grandfather had a heart attack. It was serious, but he pulled through. However that side of the family has always been a very low-fat family and my mom was worried, so she e-mailed him Fathead. He watched the whole thing, but then he e-mailed my mom back and said he was so confused, that what you said made sense but it was the complete opposite of what his cardiologist told him. So then my mom told him that when my other grandpa had a heart attack, his cholesterol was 140. I think that helped stop him wanting to take statins like his doctor wanted him to. All I can do is e-mail him the link to this blog and cross my fingers. Maybe when he sees that bit about statins destroying muscle he’ll think twice.

If someone could get him to read Malcolm Kendrick’s book, that might help.

About a month ago, my grandfather had a heart attack. It was serious, but he pulled through. However that side of the family has always been a very low-fat family and my mom was worried, so she e-mailed him Fathead. He watched the whole thing, but then he e-mailed my mom back and said he was so confused, that what you said made sense but it was the complete opposite of what his cardiologist told him. So then my mom told him that when my other grandpa had a heart attack, his cholesterol was 140. I think that helped stop him wanting to take statins like his doctor wanted him to. All I can do is e-mail him the link to this blog and cross my fingers. Maybe when he sees that bit about statins destroying muscle he’ll think twice.

If someone could get him to read Malcolm Kendrick’s book, that might help.

As for Britain – survival rules are easy: just don’t buy anything the government approves of as “Healthy Eating” and as for their recommendations: just do the exact opposite and you can’t go wrong…
Sounds like a good topic for the next movie. Go on a diet based on doing the exact opposite of what the USDA guidelines say and report what happens.

“Digital imaging analysis of the snapshots will then calculate how many calories each student scarfed down. ”

Dear lord, is this a joke?? And when that fails to reduce obesity, we’ll just keep coming up with more high tech ways to fight the problem (which also won’t work very well, and will likely create other problems in the process).

As a society, we seem to have developed a very backwards way of looking at problem solving in general. Instead of going for the simple, obvious solutions, we always seem to go for the complicated high tech solutions. Every single time. Whether it’s obesity, illness, politics, or anything else. The answer always seems to be to throw more money and technology at the situation. Things aren’t going to change until there is a fundamental shift in this thinking…
Indeed. Gathering data on what kids refuse throw away isn’t going to change anything.

As for Britain – survival rules are easy: just don’t buy anything the government approves of as “Healthy Eating” and as for their recommendations: just do the exact opposite and you can’t go wrong…
Sounds like a good topic for the next movie. Go on a diet based on doing the exact opposite of what the USDA guidelines say and report what happens.

FDA has warned on 80mg Simvastatin (Zocor) before. In 2010 they said that people who were taking 80 mg Simvastatin and Diltiazem (blood pressure and angina medicine) were taking to high a dose of that statin. I was taking both. I also had/have “unexplained” muscle aches and nerve damage in feet. I have coronary artery disease and have been on a statin for 18 years. Until last year when I decided to stop for all the reasons you write about. My Doc is still recovering from my decision. Atkins diet also, big drop in triglycerides, 43 pound weight loss. Still high cholesterol but I will not take any more statins. With this disease I have, it is a bit scary making these decisions in light of what we are told by the medics. That is why your work is so important. We must have the information necessary to make informed decisions. Please keep it up.

“Digital imaging analysis of the snapshots will then calculate how many calories each student scarfed down. ”

Dear lord, is this a joke?? And when that fails to reduce obesity, we’ll just keep coming up with more high tech ways to fight the problem (which also won’t work very well, and will likely create other problems in the process).

As a society, we seem to have developed a very backwards way of looking at problem solving in general. Instead of going for the simple, obvious solutions, we always seem to go for the complicated high tech solutions. Every single time. Whether it’s obesity, illness, politics, or anything else. The answer always seems to be to throw more money and technology at the situation. Things aren’t going to change until there is a fundamental shift in this thinking…
Indeed. Gathering data on what kids refuse throw away isn’t going to change anything.

FDA has warned on 80mg Simvastatin (Zocor) before. In 2010 they said that people who were taking 80 mg Simvastatin and Diltiazem (blood pressure and angina medicine) were taking to high a dose of that statin. I was taking both. I also had/have “unexplained” muscle aches and nerve damage in feet. I have coronary artery disease and have been on a statin for 18 years. Until last year when I decided to stop for all the reasons you write about. My Doc is still recovering from my decision. Atkins diet also, big drop in triglycerides, 43 pound weight loss. Still high cholesterol but I will not take any more statins. With this disease I have, it is a bit scary making these decisions in light of what we are told by the medics. That is why your work is so important. We must have the information necessary to make informed decisions. Please keep it up.

We live in the UK and my son got a letter from the NHS telling him that when he got weighed and measured at school he was ‘obese’… problem is that in the intervening eight months between measurement and the letter, he’d shot up 7 cm in height but his weight was the same as it had been before. So he’d gone from being ‘obese’ to being a normal weight. What if I’d put him on a calorie controlled diet? Thankfully I didn’t, as thanks to Fat Head I have a functioning brain 🙂

That’s why this BMI scoring for kids is such nonsense. My older daughter — who climbs trees like a monkey and scampers to the top of rock-climbing walls while older kids quit halfway up — is currently labeled as underweight for her height.

We live in the UK and my son got a letter from the NHS telling him that when he got weighed and measured at school he was ‘obese’… problem is that in the intervening eight months between measurement and the letter, he’d shot up 7 cm in height but his weight was the same as it had been before. So he’d gone from being ‘obese’ to being a normal weight. What if I’d put him on a calorie controlled diet? Thankfully I didn’t, as thanks to Fat Head I have a functioning brain 🙂

That’s why this BMI scoring for kids is such nonsense. My older daughter — who climbs trees like a monkey and scampers to the top of rock-climbing walls while older kids quit halfway up — is currently labeled as underweight for her height.

I’m pretty sure i could tell everyone why the kids aren’t eating their lunches at school for a lot less. They don’t taste good!

Seriously they don’t have what kids need in them, fat!

I heard on the radio that some schools were ditching the chocolate milk. The reason they started giving the kids an option of chocolate milk was because they weren’t drinking plain milk. Or i should so low fat milk. Well, no kidding. Take the fat out of milk and it doesn’t taste good, and to top it off it doesn’t provide what they need!

Exactly. Nobody ever had to tell us to drink our whole milk when I was in grade school.

I’m pretty sure i could tell everyone why the kids aren’t eating their lunches at school for a lot less. They don’t taste good!

Seriously they don’t have what kids need in them, fat!

I heard on the radio that some schools were ditching the chocolate milk. The reason they started giving the kids an option of chocolate milk was because they weren’t drinking plain milk. Or i should so low fat milk. Well, no kidding. Take the fat out of milk and it doesn’t taste good, and to top it off it doesn’t provide what they need!

Exactly. Nobody ever had to tell us to drink our whole milk when I was in grade school.

Doctors, for the most part, are terrible. Three weeks ago, I went into the hospital with horrific gall bladder pain (I’d been suffering with a bad gall bladder for 5 years because the original surgeon who’d seen me told me I was simply too fat for him to safely operate on), and as I am sobbing, writhing in pain and vomiting, the ER doc had the nerve to ask–first thing–if I’d ever considered bariatric surgery.

Really.

I was admitted half an hour later. The surgeon saw me in the morning and tries to insist that what I really needed was to have my stomach stapled along with my gall bladder out. After all, as an overweight woman, I was heading for heart disease, cancer, diabetes, the loss of a foot, etc! I told him no, thank you, I’m healthy (because I am: no diabetes, no high blood pressure, no mobility issues, nothing, I’m just fat). He dropped it, gave me the surgery FINALLY (though told me he expected me not to recover well), and a week after the surgery, he admitted to me he was shocked I’d recovered so well and that all the tests he’d done–without my permission–showed I was perfectly healthy.

Though he still suggested I see a bariatric surgeon.

Head. Desk.

Good grief. That’s bordering on malpractice, if it’s not already over the line.

Doctors, for the most part, are terrible. Three weeks ago, I went into the hospital with horrific gall bladder pain (I’d been suffering with a bad gall bladder for 5 years because the original surgeon who’d seen me told me I was simply too fat for him to safely operate on), and as I am sobbing, writhing in pain and vomiting, the ER doc had the nerve to ask–first thing–if I’d ever considered bariatric surgery.

Really.

I was admitted half an hour later. The surgeon saw me in the morning and tries to insist that what I really needed was to have my stomach stapled along with my gall bladder out. After all, as an overweight woman, I was heading for heart disease, cancer, diabetes, the loss of a foot, etc! I told him no, thank you, I’m healthy (because I am: no diabetes, no high blood pressure, no mobility issues, nothing, I’m just fat). He dropped it, gave me the surgery FINALLY (though told me he expected me not to recover well), and a week after the surgery, he admitted to me he was shocked I’d recovered so well and that all the tests he’d done–without my permission–showed I was perfectly healthy.

Though he still suggested I see a bariatric surgeon.

Head. Desk.

Good grief. That’s bordering on malpractice, if it’s not already over the line.